The Hidden Secrets to Perfect Cut-Out Sugar Cookies
Of all of the fails, cut-out sugar cookies have been the biggest fail for me. They are misshapen, taste like cardboard, and are far too time-consuming. I have tried a half dozen recipes with the same results and had determined that I was destined to be a cut-out cookie failure.
I decided this year though that I would find a good recipe that would look nice and yield a tasty result. Where do I turn when I don't have time to run a full-fledged test kitchen out of my home? My America's Test Kitchen Family Cookbook. The recipe was entirely unique and promised fantastic results. Crisp cookies, full flavor, and step-by-step tutorials that would be worth eating and sharing.
While the dough is chilling, you can tidy up the kitchen and then get everything else ready to go. Line your cookie sheets with parchment paper, break out those cookie cutters, and tear off two sheets of parchment paper per dough disk to roll out your cookies. That's right, no floured counters which will save on clean-up time!
Into the oven they will go while you stand watching them through the glass and continuing to annoyingly pat yourself on the back. Instead of letting one rack stay doughy and one rack get burnt, they have you rotate the cookie sheets halfway through. What a novel idea!
They recommend decorating with glaze. I am not a fan of how the glaze tastes. I stick to a traditional frosting recipe that requires a little more time to harden, but has a thicker tasting frosting.
Since our cookie sheets were lined with parchment paper, I took the paper off and gave each kid one to use to decorate their cookies. This caught any runaway sprinkles or the sprinkle dumping that seems to occur every year (see above for examples).
Recipe says it will yield approximately 3 dozen cookies. I doubled the recipe & got 32 cookies with my cookie cutters. The amount of cookies will definitely depend on your cookie cutter sizes!
2 1/2 cups flour
3/4 cup superfine sugar (just whipped 1 cup sugar in the food processor until it was blended and then measured out 3/4 cup)
1/4 teaspoon salt
16 tablespoons (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into 1/2" pieces & softened
2 tablespoons cream cheese, softened
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Whisk the flour, sugar, & salt together in a large bowl. Beat the butter into the flour mixture, one piece at a time using an electric mixer on medium-low speed, then continue to beat until the mixture looks crumbly and slightly wet, 1 to 2 minutes. Beat in the cream cheese & vanilla until he dough just begins to form large clumps, about thirty seconds.
Knead the dough in the large bowl by hand a few times until it forms a large, cohesive mass. Turn the dough out onto a clean counter, divide it in half, and apt into a two four inch disks. Wrap the disks tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate until they begin to firm up, 20 to 30 minutes.
Adjust an oven rack to the middle position and heat the oven to 375. Work with one disk at a time, roll out the dough to a 1/8" thickness between two sheets of parchment paper. Slide the rolled dough and parchment onto a baking sheet & refrigerate again until firm.
Working with one sheet of dough at a time cut out shapes using cookie cutters and lay on two parchment-lined baking sheets, spaced about 1" apart. Bake the cookies until light golden brown, about ten minutes, rotating the baking sheet halfway through baking.
Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for two minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to cool completely, about thirty minutes. When cooled, the cookies can be decorated as desired.
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Sugar Cookie Frosting
4 cups confectioners sugar
1/2 cup shortening
5 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Food coloring
In a large bowl, cream together confectioners sugar and shortening until smooth. Gradually mix in milk and vanilla with an electric mixer until smooth and stiff, about five minutes. Color with food coloring if desired.
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I would highly recommend adding this cookbook to your holiday wish list. That same recipe can be adapted for many different types of cookies! It has definitely earned its keep on my bookshelf.
Do you have a favorite holiday cookie recipe? Please share your recipes or links here!









You are right about the glaze, though - I used it on half the cookies and realized quickly it's not what I wanted, so I will try your frosting recipe tonight.
Thanks for posting!!"